Archive for January, 2009

Ogg and Friends Challenge Flash

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

Mozilla has given $100, 000 to the Wikimedia Foundation to improve and develop Ogg Theora, an open source video codec being developed by the Xiph.org Foundation. Wikimedia will disburs funds over a six-month period. Although not the best-known video format, Ogg already has some major support from web developers. Theora will be built into Firefox 3.1, which is currently in Beta 2, as well as into Norway’s homegrown browser Opera. Theora is also the video format of choice for all Wikimedia Foundation projects.

Mozilla, Wikimedia and Xiph.org hope to unseat the predominant video standard on the web, Adobe Flash. Microsoft is already encroaching on Flash’s dominance with its Silverlight codec, but this still keeps web video in the hands of larger corporations.

Mozilla’s Director of Evangelism Christopher Blizzard believes this is a bad thing for the future of the Internet. “Anyone can build online tools without permission that speak the lingua franca of the web,” Blizzard wrote in a blog post. “You can find tools to do just about anything. It’s a truly vibrant marketplace. There’s one exception to this: video on the web.”

Blizzard goes on to explain that currently, access to powerful video tools requires a heavy investment upfront as well as per-unit royalties and expensive encoders. Ogg could change all that, and move video away from plugins to let it be embedded more easily on any web page, similar to the way we view photographs and other still images on a web page.

That is certainly an exciting idea. For bloggers and other small websites, this means posting a video won’t have to be done via YouTube or other online services. It also could create an explosion of growth for smaller video sites.

But is this realistic? Perhaps, but not anytime soon. Mozilla developers are still struggling to get the codec to work the way they want it to, and Blizzard himself admits that Ogg is not perfect although “certainly good enough for how video is used on the web today.” Also, Flash may have its detractors, but businesses and users are used to it and know how to use it. As with any new technology on the web, open source video must overcome legacy issues from those who will be slow to adopt a new format. Ogg Theora may technologially revolutionize online video, but to succeed in the market it’s got a long, hard battle ahead of it.

Economy shrinks at 3.8 percent pace in 4Q

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

The economy shrank at a 3.8 percent pace at the end of 2008, the worst showing in a quarter-century, as the deepening recession forced consumers and businesses to throttle back spending.

Although the initial result was better than economists expected, the figure is likely to be revised even lower in the months ahead and some believe the economy is contracting in the current quarter at a pace of around 5 percent. The current January-March period, they said, will probably turn out to be the worst quarter for the recession.

American consumers and businesses cut back everywhere in the final three months of 2008. Shoppers chopped spending on cars, furniture, appliances, clothes and other items. Businesses dropped the ax on equipment and software, home building and commercial construction. And overseas sales of U.S.-made goods and services tanked as foreign buyers grappled with their own economic woes.

“The downturn is intensifying. The fourth quarter is worse than it looks,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com.

The new figure, released Friday by the Commerce Department, showed the economy sinking at a much faster clip in the October-December period than the 0.5 percent decline logged in prior quarter.

The report tallies gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced within the United States. It is considered the broadest barometer of the country’s economic health.

A build-up in business inventories — which in calculating GDP adds to economic activity — masked the fourth-quarter’s true weakness. When inventories are stripped out, the economy would have contracted at a 5.1 percent pace in the fourth quarter, closer to the 5.4 percent drop that economists expected. Businesses couldn’t cut production fast enough in response to waning customer demand and got stuck with excess inventories, economists explained.

On Wall Street, stocks dipped. The Dow Jones industrial average slid more than 60 points in morning trading, and broader indexes also fell.

Still, the fourth quarter was by far the weakest three-month period in 2008, and the 3.8 percent figure is likely to be revised even lower as the government makes new estimates based on more complete data. The economy will stay very weak for much of this year, analysts predict.

A massive pullback by consumers played a prominent role in the economy’s worsening backslide. They are cutting back on spending as jobs disappear and major investments — homes, stocks, retirement accounts — tank in value. Businesses are retrenching, too, as profits shrivel and demand wanes from customers in the U.S. and overseas.

Battered consumers slashed spending at a 3.5 percent pace at the end of 2008, following a bigger 3.8 percent annualized cutback in the third quarter. The last time consumers chopped spending for two straight quarters was in the closing quarter of 1990 and the opening quarter of 1991.

In the fourth quarter of 2008, Americans cut back spending especially hard on big-ticket “durable” goods, including cars, appliances and furniture. Spending on durables plunged at rate of 22.4 percent, the most since early 1987.

A 7.1 percent annualized cutback in spending on “nondurables,” such as food and clothing was the deepest since the end of 1950.

Americans newfound frugality was clearly visible. The savings rate rose to 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter. That was up from 1.2 percent in the third quarter and matched the rate in early 2002 when the country was still struggling to get back to full economic health after the 2001 recession.

Big cutbacks by homebuilders — reeling from the collapsed housing market — and other companies also figured into the fourth-quarter weakness. Homebuilders slashed spending at a 23.6 percent pace, even deeper than the 16 percent annualized cut in the prior three months.

Spending by businesses on equipment and software dropped at a whopping 27.8 percent annualized pace in the fourth quarter, the most since early 1958.

Meanwhile, U.S. exports, whose growth earlier last year helped to keep the economy afloat, turned negative. Exports plunged at a rate of 19.7 percent in the fourth quarter, the most since the third quarter of 1974. Economic slowdowns in other countries has cut into demand for U.S goods and services.

The report provided clear evidence of the economy’s rapid deterioration as the housing, credit and financial crises — the worst since the 1930s — feed on each other. It’s a vicious cycle that has proven difficult for Washington policymakers to break.

The 3.8 percent annualized drop marked the weakest quarterly showing since a 6.4 percent annualized plunge in the first quarter of 1982, when the country was suffering through a severe recession.

For all of 2008, the economy grew by just 1.3 percent. That was down from a 2 percent gain in 2007 and marked the slowest growth since the last recession in 2001.

To jolt life back into the economy, President Barack Obama and Congress are racing to enact a multibillion-dollar package of increased government spending that includes big public works projects and tax cuts. The House passed a $819 billion package on Wednesday and the bill is working its way through the Senate. Economists say the money needs to be quickly pumped into the economy to help stop the free-fall.

The White House was bracing for bad news. On the eve of the report’s release, press secretary Robert Gibbs thought the fourth-quarter results would be “fairly staggering.”

The economy plunged deeper into recession despite a $700 billion financial bailout program run by the Treasury Department and a slew of radical programs by the Federal Reserve and others designed to bust through a debilitating credit clog and get banks to lend more freely. The Fed last month slashed a key interest rate to a record low, and on Wednesday signaled that it would use other unconventional tools to turn the economy around. The central bank acknowledged that its hope for a gradual economic recovery later this year faced “significant” downside risks.

Trying to survive the downturn, businesses are scrambling to cut costs and that’s taking a painful toll on the nation’s labor market.

The unemployment rate jumped to a 16-year high of 7.2 percent in December and could hit 10 percent or higher at the end of this year or early next year. A staggering 2.6 million jobs were lost last year, the most since 1945, though the labor force has grown significantly since then. Another 2 million or more jobs will vanish this year, economists predict.

This week alone, tens of thousands of new layoffs were announced by companies including Ford Motor Co., Eastman Kodak Co., Black & Decker Corp., Boeing Co., Pfizer Inc., Caterpillar Inc., Home Depot Inc. and Target Corp.

The economy’s slowdown also has caused once surging prices to retreat, and companies are discounting to lure buyers.

An inflation gauge tied to the report showed prices dropping at a rate of 5.5 percent in the fourth quarter, a turnaround from the 5 percent growth rate logged in the prior period. Stripping out food and energy, prices inched up at a rate of just 0.6 percent, a big moderation from the 2.4 percent growth rate in the third quarter.

The recession also is keeping a lid on employment costs. The Labor Department said Friday its employment cost index rose 0.5 percent for the fourth quarter, the slowest pace in nearly a decade. For the whole year, employment costs, including wages and benefits, showed an increase of 2.6 percent, an all-time low for records that go back to 1982.

The most severe spending pullback in decades is sending a number of stores, including Circuit City and discount clothing chain Goody’s Family Clothing, into liquidation. Stores were battered by the weakest holiday period in four decades by one measure, and retail sales appear to be deteriorating this month. The National Retail Federation, the world’s largest retail trade group, predicts that sales will fall 0.5 percent this year, well below last year’s meager 1.4 percent gain.

Ogg and Friends Challenge Flash

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Mozilla has given $100, 000 to the Wikimedia Foundation to improve and develop Ogg Theora, an open source video codec being developed by the Xiph.org Foundation. Wikimedia will disburs funds over a six-month period. Although not the best-known video format, Ogg already has some major support from web developers. Theora will be built into Firefox 3.1, which is currently in Beta 2, as well as into Norway’s homegrown browser Opera. Theora is also the video format of choice for all Wikimedia Foundation projects.

Mozilla, Wikimedia and Xiph.org hope to unseat the predominant video standard on the web, Adobe Flash. Microsoft is already encroaching on Flash’s dominance with its Silverlight codec, but this still keeps web video in the hands of larger corporations.

Mozilla’s Director of Evangelism Christopher Blizzard believes this is a bad thing for the future of the Internet. “Anyone can build online tools without permission that speak the lingua franca of the web,” Blizzard wrote in a blog post. “You can find tools to do just about anything. It’s a truly vibrant marketplace. There’s one exception to this: video on the web.”

Blizzard goes on to explain that currently, access to powerful video tools requires a heavy investment upfront as well as per-unit royalties and expensive encoders. Ogg could change all that, and move video away from plugins to let it be embedded more easily on any web page, similar to the way we view photographs and other still images on a web page.

That is certainly an exciting idea. For bloggers and other small websites, this means posting a video won’t have to be done via YouTube or other online services. It also could create an explosion of growth for smaller video sites.

But is this realistic? Perhaps, but not anytime soon. Mozilla developers are still struggling to get the codec to work the way they want it to, and Blizzard himself admits that Ogg is not perfect although “certainly good enough for how video is used on the web today.” Also, Flash may have its detractors, but businesses and users are used to it and know how to use it. As with any new technology on the web, open source video must overcome legacy issues from those who will be slow to adopt a new format. Ogg Theora may technologially revolutionize online video, but to succeed in the market it’s got a long, hard battle ahead of it.

Markets hold firm in morning trade

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Indian equities markets, which opened higher Wednesday, managed to hold on to their gain through most of the morning, though trading volumes remained low.

A little before noon, a key index was about 0.87 percent higher than its last closing figure.

The sensitive index (Sensex) of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) was at 9,082.67 points, 0.87 percent or 78.59 points higher than its previous close. It had opened at 9,077.65 points, higher than its 9,004.08-point close Tuesday.

At the same time, the S&P CNX Nifty index of the National Stock Exchange (NSE) was at 2,797.1 points, 0.93 percent higher than its previous close of 2,771.35.

Broader market indices were up with the BSE midcap index trading 0.44 percent higher and BSE smallcap gaining 0.67 percent.

Leading the gainers’ list on the Sensex at this time were Mahindra and Mahindra (up 3.78 percent at Rs.282.50), Wipro (up 3.27 percent at Rs.233.55) and Tata Motors (up 3.17 percent at Rs.144.75).

Among losing scrips were Reliance Communications (down 4.14 percent at Rs.164.50) and Tata Steel (down 2.52 percent at Rs.167.95).

Of the 13-sectoral indices on the BSE, FMCG and Auto stocks led the bunch.

In other Asian markets, a key index of the Tokyo stock exchange, the Nikkei 225 Stock Average, was up 0.77 percent at 8,122.81.

However, the Hang Seng, a key index of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, dropped 0.63 percent over its last close.

Layers captures layered screenshots

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Wuomn on Monday announced the release of Layers 1.0, a new screen capture utility for Mac OS X. It costs $19.95 (available now for $15).

Layers captures screenshots in a fully Photoshop-compatible image format, with separate layers for each window, including men and desktop icons, dock and menu bar. You can customize screen captures further, including window selection, image format and other parameters. Other advanced options include the ability to specify framing, shadow, opacity and layer boundaries. Layers is multi-display compatible.

Layers requires Mac OS X 10.5 or later, 5.4 MB hard disk space and Adobe Photoshop 5.0 or later

Correction: Zoo economy story

Monday, January 19th, 2009

In a Jan. 13 story about budget cuts to zoos across the country, The Associated Press reported erroneously that Florida lawmakers cut funding for marine mammal care. The proposal was to shift funding sources, but it was not taken up by the full Senate.

Jerry Scroggin, the owner of a Louisiana Internet Service Provider, says he’s skeptical of a service that proposes to pay ISPs to police their networks for pirated music and movies. I wrote about Scroggin last month following the music industry’s announcement that it would scale back a longtime strategy of suing individuals suspected of music piracy, and instead enlist the help of ISPs to thwart copyright violations. Scroggin argued that the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) should help pay the costs incurred when they ask ISPs to chase down suspected music pirates. Days after the story was published, antipiracy firm Nexicon contacted Scroggin about a plan to share money collected from accused file sharers with ISPs. In theory at least, paying ISPs could sway the balance of power in copyright enforcement. Up to now, ISPs have shied away from helping content creators protect intellectual property. There hasn’t been much to motivate them, said Scroggins. Film studios and the major music labels frequently ask ISPs to crack down on copyright violators. They expect this done free of charge, Scroggin said. Under the RIAA’s new plan, ISPs would also be asked to suspend the accounts of chronic offenders. That means an ISP might be forced to wave bye-bye to paying customers without receiving any compensation. If ISPs could somehow be compensated, it might encourage them to become copyright enforcers. The RIAA has said it wants ISPs to do nothing more than honor their own user agreements, which have long prohibited illegal acts, such as unauthorized file sharing. On Thursday, I talked to Kyle Reed, the Nexicon sales associate who contacted Scroggin. He confirmed for me that Nexicon claims it can help ISPs automate and reduce the costs of chasing down file sharers, cut down on false positives and will share revenue collected from suspected copyright violators with ISPs. He said previous antipiracy services have alienated ISPs and Nexicon wishes to avoid that. Nexicon offers a variety of antipiracy services. One offering tracks those people who infringe on intellectual property and sends take-down notices to their ISPs. Reed said the company has the ability to distribute 95 million of these notices per day. That could prove helpful, according to Reed because the company plans to announce more customers soon. As of right now, Reed said Nexicon has only disclosed the name of one customer of this service: the family of rocker Frank Zappa. As part of Nexicon’s “Get Amnesty” service, the company tries to obtain fees from those it claims are guilty of violating copyright law. Nexicon sends e-mails to those accused notifying them that they must “settle” with the copyright owners, which typically means paying a fee. “After opening the email, the infringer clicks a link to visit GetAmnesty.com, where they can settle their infringement to avoid legal action and receive a legal release from the copyright owner,” according to a statement on the company’s site. Nexicon then offers to help ISPs manage the take-down notices they receive from, well, Nexicon and competitors. The company’s Envoy system uses a combination of automated and human systems to flag copyright violations and send take-down notices–saving ISPs time and money, Reed said. He added that the system is less likely to accuse someone by mistake. “The user is presented in real-time a complete inventory of infringements processed by Nexicon on behalf of its copyright owner clients,” the company wrote on its site. Scroggin said he hasn’t heard Nexicon’s entire pitch but wasn’t impressed with the overall approach. “I would still wind up losing customers,” Scroggin said. “I would also have to pay Nexicon for this…I have to survive in this economy but I don’t have the big marketing dollars that bigger ISPs have. I have to fund 401(K)s and find ways not to lay off people. Giving free reign to the RIAA is not part of my business model.”

Friday, January 16th, 2009

The global music industry is making progress in clamping down on online piracy by evolving radical new ways of selling tunes, but 95 percent of downloads remain illegal, a report said Friday.

New business models helped the legal online music sector balloon for a sixth straight year in 2008, growing by 25 percent to 3.7 billion dollars (2.8 billion euros) in trade value, it said.

But some 40 billion music files were still illicitly shared last year, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) in its annual report on the state of digital music.

“The music sector is still overshadowed by the huge amount of unlicensed music distributed online,” it said, citing studies in 16 countries showing that only one in 20 downloads are via legal channels.

Cutting pirates’ Internet connections is an increasingly-used option for dealing with persistent offenders, rather than threatening people with fines or other criminal sanctions.

But overall, things are looking up online: digital outlets — as opposed to CDs and other traditional forms of music — now account for some 20 percent of recorded music sales, up from 15 per cent in 2007, said the 30-page report.

Sales of single tracks continues to drive the digital music expansion, and were up 24 percent in 2008 to 1.4 billion sales, while online album sales also grew by 36 percent, according to the IFPI’s Digital Music Report 2009.

New Orleans rapper Lil Wayne’s “Lollipop” was the biggest-selling digital single worldwide last year, with 9.1 million copies sold — a figure 1.8 million bigger than the best-selling single in 2007.

But new methods of selling are exploding, including a a new generation of music subscription services, social networking sites and new licensing channels, led by services like Nokia Comes With Music and MySpace Music.

Partnerships with Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are also opening up as a new sales route, including TDC in Denmark, Neuf Cegetel in France, Sweden’s TeliaSonera and BSkyB in Britain.

“The recorded music industry is reinventing itself and its business models,” said IFPI chairman John Kennedy.

“There is a momentous debate going on about the environment on which our business… depends. Governments are beginning to accept that… doing nothing is not an option if there is to be a future for commercial digital content.”

The music industry body welcomed the way governments were collaborating with Internet providers to curb piracy.

“In 2008 a tipping point was reached, with governments in France and the UK leading the way in looking to ISPs to help bring piracy on their networks under control,” it said.

In particular ISPs are cooperating in cutting Internet access for offenders.

“The momentum for ISP cooperation extends beyond France and the UK. New Zealand will start requiring ISPs to implement a policy of terminating the accounts of repeat infringers in February,” it said.

Authorities in the United States, Italy, Australia, Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea are also thinking of such a move, according to IFPI.

There is also evidence that the digital expansion is having a negative effect on locally-produced music, reducing the number of home-grown artists, who struggle due to easy availability of music from around the world.

In France, album releases by new artists fell by 16 per cent in the first half of 2008, and home-grown music accounted for 10 per cent of albums, compared to 15 per cent in the first half of 2005.

In Spain, just one new local artist featured in the Top 50 albums from January to November 2008, compared to 10 in 2003.

Overall, though, the IFPI report was positive, saying it “shows an industry that has shifted its approach from one based only on unit sales of music to ‘monetising’ access to music across a multitude of channels and platforms

Chandrayaan gave full pic of Moon

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Chairman G Madhavan Nair today said the successful of Chandrayan-1 mission has enabled the scientific community in the country to get a complete picture of the moon’s surface and that too to an extent of five metre resolution.

“Though several moon missions were there in the past, no mission had provided pictures and data about the entire surface of the moon. However, Chandrayan-1 is the first mission which will give data on the entire surface,” Nair said.

“It is also sending pictures of moon’s surface to the extent of five metre resolution, which no other country is currently getting. Even the US is not getting that quality of picture of Moon,” Nair said.

Nair said even the US, the leading country in the field of space science research, is getting pictures of moon’s surface in 100 metre resolution.

At a talk on ‘Indian Space Programme’ the ISRO chief said, the pictures sent by the mission would help India exploring the Moon’s surface in a better way and identify minerals on the surface.

“In last two months Chandrayan-1 has sent more than 40,000 images to the base station,” Nair said.

Nair said the Indian Space agency would be able to complete manned moon mission by 2015 AD and added that the transponder capacity would be increased to 500 by the end of 11th Plan period. At present ISRO is operating 211 transponders.

’Indian on Moon by 2020’

The ISRO proposed to undertake the country’s first manned Moon mission by 2020 following the success of Chandrayaan-I, project director of Chandrayaan-I M Annadurai has said.

The successful launch of Chandrayaan-I in October last year has given space scientists the confidence to undertake manned mission to moon, Annadurai told reporters here yesterday.

The Chandrayaan-II mission is expected to be undertaken within a couple of years followed by Chandrayaan-III, he said.

Several countries have approached India to set up a common lunar research centre for conducting various studies, the director added.

Genetics to help conserve rare bird species

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

A new DNA-based method to identify sexes of birds from a drop of blood or a feather will help captive breeding of rare and endangered species of the avians for their protection, a group of Indian scientists have said.

“Identification of sex of birds is quite confusing and just physical inspection may not help every time. We can do the identification of bird’s sex by extracting DNA from just a feather or a drop of blood of the bird,” said S Shivaji, a senior scientist at Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), Hyderabad.

“We have earlier tried the methods in vultures and now we are going to use the technique for exotic and rare Indian bird species,” said Shivaji, who is part of a team that developed the method.

“Flamingo, Alexandrian parakeets, ringnecked parakeets, plumhead, blue winged parakeets, muniyas and mainas, the Great Indian Bustard are going extinct and their conservation is essential,” Anuradha Reddy, another scientist at CCMB said.

According to experts, exotic species bought from other countries are sometimes bred in captivity and the birds are extremely costly. And rare species like the Great Indian Bustard are not found all over the country but are restricted to small isolated pockets and this new technique will help address the issues.

Captive breeding or artificial reproduction in birds is done mainly in zoos because exotic species are becoming extinct due to hunting for flesh or pet trade, loss of habitat or environmental changes like pollution which adversely affect egg laying and survival of the neonates.

Macworld: Iomega Releases new Home Media drive

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

Iomega released a new network-connected media drive at this week’s MacWorld Expo 2009 show in San Francisco.

The Iomega Home Media Network Drive starts at $160 (list) for a 500-Gbyte capacity and $230 for 1 terabyte of storage. Like most NAS (Network Attached Storage) drives, users can store their files on the Home Media Network Drive using the usual Windows and Mac sharing capabilities. The drive looks like a standard desktop external hard drive with a brushed aluminum case, so it will look fine next to your PC or in your den.

Where the Iomega drive differs is that it runs EMC’s LifeLine Home software, which is based on Linux. Lifeline Home supports iTunes sharing, UPnP (Universal Plug and Play) and DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance) standards, so the Home Media Network drive can serve content to desktops and laptops (Windows, Mac, and Linux), digital picture frames, networked TVs, Playstation 3, Xbox 360 and any other devices that support the listed standards.

The Home Media Network Drive also includes EMC’s Retospect Express software for backing up Windows PCs and Macs on your network, using the drive’s built-in Gigabit Ethernet port. Iomega also bundles in a freebie 2-GB subscription to MozyHome online backup service.

The Home Media Network drive is available in early January 2009.